Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Pat Flynn on the Life-Changing Benefits of Generalism
Episode Date: June 21, 2019While there are many ways to thrive in many sectors of today’s modern economy, there’s no arguing that it’s getting harder and harder to identify and capitalize on these opportunities. Robots an...d AI are eliminating jobs, globalization and the democratization of high-quality education is expanding the talent pool, and customers are becoming more selective, sophisticated, and stipulating. To overcome these obstacles, we’re often told to specialize—to focus all of our energies, efforts, and resources on becoming really good at one thing to the exclusion of all else. This isn’t entirely wrongheaded, but for most people, it isn’t likely to lead to long-term success and fulfillment but disappointment, burnout, and failure, instead. This extends beyond merely moneymaking too, and applies to just about every endeavor you could want to undertake. The reign of the hyperspecialist is coming to an end and the rise of the skilled generalist is at hand. What does that mean, exactly? Well, as the author of the book How to Be Better at (Almost) Everything, Pat Flynn, shares in this episode, generalism refers to acquiring a variety of know-hows and abilities, and he argues this is a smarter and more practical approach to winning in today’s world. Generalism, Pat explains, is one of the keys to making more money, getting in better shape, and becoming more successful, effective, and happy in every aspect of your life, and his personal approach to generalism starts with developing skills that’ll serve you well no matter where the red thread of fate takes you—meta-skills as Pat refers to them. 6:12 - What do you mean by generalism? 11:52 - How does generalism make us more money than specifism? 29:58 - What are some examples of metaskills and force multiplier skills? 32:33 - What are some of the myths and mistakes of logic and reason? 39:51 - What are more examples of metaskills and force multiplier skills? 46:36 - What are your tips to improve focus? 50:51 - What is the name of your book and where can people find you and your work? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello again, Mike Matthews here, and welcome to another episode of the Muscle for Life
podcast. So this one is a change of pace, an interesting conversation I had with the
author and educator Pat Flynn from Chronicles of Strength, and it is about the topic of generalism. And so what is that?
Well, while there are many ways to thrive in many sectors of today's modern economy,
there is no arguing that it is getting harder and harder to identify and capitalize on these
opportunities.
We have robots and AI that are eliminating jobs and threatening to eliminate
many more in the near future. We have globalization and the democratization of high quality education
that is expanding the talent pool. And we have customers who are becoming much more selective,
sophisticated, and stipulating. Harder to sell and retain as customers.
Now, to overcome these obstacles, we are often told to specialize, to focus all of our energies
and efforts and resources on becoming really, really good at one thing to the exclusion of
basically everything else. And this isn't entirely wrong-headed,
but for most people, it is not likely to lead to long-term success and fulfillment,
but disappointment, burnout, and failure instead. And this extends beyond merely money-making as
well. It really applies to just about every endeavor you could
want to undertake. The bottom line is the reign of the hyper-specialist is coming to an end,
and the rise of the skilled generalist is at hand. What does that mean, though? Well,
as the author of the book How to Be Better at Almost Everything, and the owner and writer over at ChroniclesOfStrength.com, Pat Flynn, shares in this episode, generalism refers to acquiring a variety of know-hows and abilities.
And he argues this is a smarter and more practical approach to winning in today's world.
and more practical approach to winning in today's world. Generalism, Pat explains, is one of the keys to making more money, to getting in better shape, and becoming more successful, effective,
and happy in just about every aspect of your life. And Pat's personal approach to generalism
starts with developing skills that'll serve you well no matter where the red thread of fate takes
you. Meta skills, as Pat refers to them. So all that and more in today's episode.
This is where I would normally plug a sponsor to pay the bills, but I'm not big on promoting stuff
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Let's get to the show. Mr. Pat Flynn has arrived. Welcome, welcome, sir.
Yeah, it's great to be here, Mike. Thanks for having me on.
Yeah, thanks for taking the time. So I thought it would be good to get you on to discuss
really what you talk about in your book, which came from
what you have been talking about over on your website. And I get your emails and this concept
of generalism versus specificity, I guess, or that's actually not the word that you use, right?
It's generalism versus... Well, you actually used specifism last time we talked and I kind of like
that.
What would the word be there?
It'd be a neologism?
That's a made up word, right?
But it conveys the point.
So yeah, it definitely does not exist.
But hey, Shakespeare made up a bunch of words, so why can't I?
Yeah, no, I totally dig it.
And it stuck with me since we last spoke.
So I think once we get around to editing the book for hopefully the second issue, maybe
I'll have to quote you in it.
Do it. No, just swipe. Just deal it. I don't care.
Sure thing.
Okay. According to a medical dictionary, specifism is curative technique that advocates selecting
homeopathic remedies without regard to a particular person's reaction to the illness,
but simply by the organ. So, hey.
So, that's definitely what I'm not talking about.
So, actually, it's not inventing a word. It's just inventing a definition. That's not as bad.
Yeah, which is, sure, fair enough.
But anyways, yeah. So, what do you mean by generalism?
Yeah. So, the general argument that I make in the book is this, and then we can go in whatever
direction we want with it. I say that for most people, most of the time in today's economy, you're probably better off getting good to great, or at least fairly competent
at a wide array of skills, and then learning to combine those skills or stack those skills
to form competitive and creative advantages in life. And that that will behoove you more than
trying to be a hardcore lifelong specialist. That's where the idea of
specifism was appealing to me. Or really rather than trying to just be the best in the world at
any one thing. And that's my launching point. Yeah. And I would say that just right off the
bat, yeah, I would tend to agree, especially if we're talking about becoming the best in the world,
because let's face it, what does that mean then? You're in the top 100 maybe of something like, I think of golf,
right? So at any given time, I think there's only 120 card carrying PGA members, something like that. So you're really just looking at like, those are the pros. Those are the best golfers in the
world. And then you have the best of the best is like whatever the top 20 or 30 to try to reach
that level is for most people, it's just not going to happen, period.
My book is not for Michael Phelps.
That's correct.
Yeah, exactly.
And there are a number of reasons for that.
Gladwell touches on a few of them in Outliers.
And so I would agree.
But I would say also, though, you definitely do not need to be the best in the world at
anything to live a good life. And by live a good life,
I mean not only achieve professional success or financial success, but also achieve a level of
skill and produce things that you're proud of, right? And that matters as well, definitely in
terms of personal satisfaction, because money is not very satisfying. It doesn't matter how much
you make it, but unless you're like a huge narcissist, you're not going to get that much satisfaction out of money.
It hits diminishing, that point of diminishing turns very quickly. But what you can get a lot
more satisfaction out of is doing something that is meaningful to you, doing something that you
are good at and doing something that allows you to have produced something you're proud of, right?
And that other people appreciate. And you don't have to be the best in the world. at and doing something that allows you to have produced something you're proud of, right? And
that other people appreciate. And you don't have to be the best in the world. You have to reach
the level of very good, I guess, right? Yeah, well, that was wonderfully and beautifully said.
And in terms of a happy life or a good life, that's a question I'm very interested in.
People may not realize this, but my education background is actually not at all in fitness. That was kind of something that I just got into on the side.
My undergrad was in economics, finance, my master's program, systematic philosophy.
So like what a good life means is a question I've always been deeply interested in.
And I try to give at least an introduction to thinking about that question from a standpoint
of virtue ethics and natural law at the beginning of the book, even though that isn't the primary point of the book. But it talks about a lot of the
things that you just brought up is that people who've thought seriously about this question,
almost none of them except for maybe some nihilists here or there would say that money or fame or
power or glory or any of those things constitute a good or happy life. Most of them look at virtue
and character traits and dispositions that are
objectively better than not. So in that sense, the answer is yes. I mean, even if you just go
back to Aristotle and read his ethics, it isn't just one virtue, right? It's a multitude of virtues
that ultimately constitute a good life. So even there, I think you can make a strong case
for generalism. My book, however, affirms what you say. And just to kind of give a little bit
of context, you know, I'm somebody who kind of grew up and I think a lot of us do with this idea
that specialization is kind of an ends. But the argument that I make and present is it should be
more of a means like a good generalist is a short term specialist. I'm not saying like try and do
everything at once or stay sucky at most things. I want you to go all in on certain areas and really master
these areas of your life, really master these skills, but then make sure that you're rotating
these skills and developing a wider base of skills or habits or dispositions or whatever
you want to call it. Because once you start to put those in combination, you'll find that they're
often far more powerful and advantageous than if you just keep going deeper and deeper in a single
direction. And I learned this originally as a musician. I cut my teeth on ACDC. I wanted to be Angus Young.
And then as I got older, you know, started being more serious about my guitar playing. I wanted
to be like Joe Satriani and Steve Vai and all these really pyrotechnic guitar players.
Turns out most people didn't care about how fast I was on the fretboard.
Most people, when I was doing these various battle of the bands competitions, which I
would always lose, they liked the guy with the Dave Matthews haircut who wasn't as good
of a guitarist as me, but he was still a good guitarist, but he could also do things that
I couldn't.
He could sing, he could dance, he could entertain a crowd, he could tell jokes.
And the lesson didn't stick with me right away, but there was more competitive advantage
for what I
wanted, which was just recognition as a musician that these other guys had being more generalist
in their musicianship than me trying to be a hyper specialist, most pyrotechnic fastest on
the fretboard. And like, how do you even define best is a difficult question. I mean, you gave
an example in golf. I think we can kind of like winnow an idea of what that might look like,
but even that is very difficult. But despite playing seven, eight hours a day, trying to be the best at what I thought was something I might be able to be the best at was not a winning strategy for me. So I think when you start to put it in some context, hopefully it becomes a little bit more clear. If you stay too abstract with it, it's kind of hard to get a handle on. but that was when I first started to think about it. Yeah, that was my next, my follow-up question was going to be like, okay, let's get specific on an example of how this might play out in life, like something practical.
So you gave that example.
Let's talk about making money, something that is on most people's minds.
example here of how generalism can trump specifism or how a situation that where specifism, I'm just going to continue using the word, might just has a lower probability of success than a more
generalist type of approach. Yeah. I just don't want people to take them like a naturopath or
something like that with all the specifism. It was homeopathy. That's you.
At the homeopathy. Yeah. Homeopathist? What would be the word for that?
Probably.
Anyway, so it actually is the complete reverse story of my kind of failed career as a musician,
which I still record and play music all the time. So that's still a big part of my life. It just isn't what I wound up doing as a career. So when I first started going to school, Mike, well,
let's backtrack a little bit. So I was a real fat, lazy kid growing up, right? I would play guitar and then I would
just play a bunch of video games and eat animal crackers and Chinese food and hang out with my
friends. I was very overweight, very unhealthy. I'm shocked that didn't create the life of your
dreams. Surprisingly, it did not, but it kept me distracted from sort of those existential pains
of reality for a while until I sort of had to wake up to the world, which eventually did happen through various social pressures and doctors telling me like,
can't be healthy at any size. This was back when you couldn't be healthy at any size. Apparently,
I think you can be now. I'm still trying to catch up on that. But this was back at a time when you
weren't allowed to be healthy at any size. And my doctor told me that. And she said that if I kept
carrying on like this, I might have a heart attack by the time I'm 50. So that started to wake me up. You're like, yeah, but I'm not 50. So why should I care?
That was kind of my first initial reaction. But at the same time, I'm like, you know what,
maybe like this isn't a very good life to be living right now. And I guess I did some deep
reflection for like a 13 year old at the time. But you know, I was able to think forward enough and
realize just really the trajectory
that I want to carry for the next 1020. Like even if I live to 8090 years old like this,
would that be a good life? And ultimately, I decided it wasn't. So I was way too timid to go
to the weight room because you know, all my friends would have been like, Oh, it looks like
Pat took a wrong turn trying to get to the custard stand or whatever. So I was like, Well, how do I
start trying to exercise without having a bunch of egg
on my face?
And I found a Taekwondo studio.
So I kind of snuck my way in there and it ended up radically transforming me in a lot
of ways.
It taught me self-control, taught me discipline, introduced me to weightlifting, eventually
got me to kettlebells, truly like fundamental in my fitness development.
So that pushes me forward in that area of my life
that once I start going to school, the way I'm paying my bills is I'm training people. So I
became a trainer and started getting all my certifications. I was actually the youngest
person to ever pass the RKC cert at the time. So I was really into kettlebells and martial arts and
all that stuff. But what happened is I started blogging about this and writing articles and whatnot. And
I started getting a lot of attention. But what surprised me is I was quite aware at the time
that I wasn't the biggest or the strongest or the fastest. I wasn't the leanest. I was generally
very fit, but I'd never won any bodybuilding comps or figure competitions or powerlifting
meets or whatever. So I would think like, well, why am I standing out in a way where a lot of people who I know are just like better than me at any of these one
things and often a lot better than me are struggling to get attention. And I realized
that it ultimately came down to, you know, my other love for music growing up was writing.
So I've always had, I figured maybe if I didn't become a musician, I would become a writer of
some sort. I've always had a passion for that. So it was kind of my background in writing,
the skills I had in writing and communication combined with my fitness skills, even though I was certainly not the best at any particular
fitness thing, but that combination of skills and the ability to communicate fitness to people in a
way that was relatable, sometimes entertaining, educational, valuable, that's what allowed me
to really start to stand out,
even though I wasn't the best. And that ultimately blossomed into the career that I have today. So
it's kind of ironic in the sense that it was completely, I stumbled into it for one, this
wasn't anything intentional, but it was the opposite way that I approached music. And I
ended up having far more success with it. Interesting. When you talk about writing
communication, I can relate to that where all the things that I have my hands in now started with writing a book. And from there, writing other books and writing articles and then recording podcasts and just communication in general, just communicating clearly to people, here's how to get fit. And people liked it. It worked. And here I am.
people liked it, it worked and here I am. So when I hear that, I don't necessarily think like,
oh, well, it's just important to be good at multiple skills. What I hear is that there are certain skills that are going to be conducive to success and certain skills that are not.
I could imagine people listening, thinking like maybe resonating with this idea that,
yeah, it doesn't quite make sense to go all in on one thing because unless you can truly become one of the best people in the world at it,
and also then leverage that correctly, all that's going to happen is you're going to,
you're going to end up getting very, very good at something that it doesn't really
turn into much. It just doesn't pan out. So I could see people going, yeah, it makes more sense
to like get good enough, which in some cases might be very good, depending on what we're talking about, but to get good enough at I would say it's, it's like a force multiplier of
sorts that over the course of my life met quite a few very successful people. I'm talking about
professional success mostly here. And that doesn't always necessarily mean financial success.
Sometimes there's some level of financial success, but like, for example, if somebody
is very successful as a, as an artist, maybe like, I know a woman who she has done very well. I think it's
not blowing glass. I think it's like she was almost like a foundry, but it's with glass.
She makes these glass sculptures. And she's done very well for herself and really made a name for
herself and achieved a certain level of financial success. As far as the money goes, it pales in
comparison to some of the entrepreneurs that I've met and some of the business owners who have astronomical net worth. But one of the things that a lot of the very successful people that I've
met have in common is they are good communicators and often good salespeople, but that goes kind of
hand in hand. They're good at communicating. They're good at persuading. And so I would say
that no matter what you want to do in life, that's one of those things, active literacy, being able to communicate well, being able to persuade people to sell them on not just knickknacks, but also yourself, your ideas.
It's going to serve you well in every aspect of your life.
So how much of your success, I'm semi-familiar with your fitness business and what you're doing, But would you agree that a lot of that is because
you're a good writer and you're a good communicator? Yeah. I think we probably could
have coauthored my book because you're getting right into it. And a lot of what I do in the
book is I search out what I call these meta skills. You use the term force multiplier.
That's a great way to describe them where, look, not all skills are created equal. Let's be honest
that there are some skills in life that no matter what you're doing, or pretty much no matter what you're doing,
if you can get a good command of these skills, like writing, like persuasion, I also would argue
for logic and a few other things as well. If you can just get a decent command of these,
you don't have to be the best in the world, but if you can just get good at them, generally good,
they're just going to make everything you do that
much better and that much easier. So I don't even know if I can really expand upon much of what you
said, because I think that you said it so well, but that's it. So I explore these sort of like
basement level skills or foundational skills, meta skills, force multiplier skills, whatever
you want to call them and make the case that just as a human, no matter what you're interested in,
these skills at the very least are not going to hurt anything. They're interesting in and of themselves. And chances are
when you attach them to the things that you're interested in, your chances of success are going
to skyrocket. And yeah, writing, communication and persuasion or salesmanship are like top two
that just should be glaringly obvious to any business person. Despite that, and I totally
agree, a lot of people find those things unpalatable,
or at least they try to pretend like they're, as opposed to, and this is, again, me just speaking
from experience, I guess, is my experience dealing, having conversations with people who
were wanting to become more successful, usually business-related conversations,
where they're saying like, oh, I just don't really like selling or it just feels
kind of dirty. If I just have a really good product or service, doesn't that kind of sell
itself? When I hear that kind of stuff is they just don't want to do the hard work. It's easy
to sit and geek out on something that you're into and put together. Well, it's maybe not easy,
but it's fairly straightforward to geek out on something and put together a product or put together a service, especially if we're talking about a trinket.
It's easy to set up the logistics of, let's say, a business where it's like, cool, I have this trinket and I'm going to sell it.
And so I opened my corporation and I came up with a name and I paid someone to make a website, all the foundational level stuff.
But the hard work is how do I get people to care? How do I
rise above the competition? How do I communicate effectively? How do I persuade? So that's just
one of the things, I mean, I get asked fairly often, usually people emailing me asking for
business advice. And I don't know how many people have reached out to me and I've kind of given that
pitch and I'm trying to sell them on
becoming a good marketer, becoming a good communicator, becoming a good salesperson.
And I don't know how many times I've recommended, like I've read over the years, many, many books
and taken quite a few courses back in the Frank Kern days, you know, the big...
Yeah. All riding in the video with the camera pointed at his face. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And so, you know, I've studied a lot of Kearns material,
Eben Pagan back when he was doing that kind of thing, studying his material,
just internet marketers who are still kind of around, but that business model is kind of dead.
And because no one's willing to pay $3,000 for a course when you could just like read a couple
books instead. But my point is, so I'd send people a list. I'd be like, here,
they start with these 10 books. These here are the classics. Like this is really
going to give you a great crash course in marketing, persuasion, communication. Maybe
I've heard back a few times, but basically never even heard back. And then I was like, okay, maybe
10 books is too much. I'll just recommend five. Isn't that silly? 10 books is too much. I'll
recommend five. I'll recommend five books. Here are the five. You know what I mean? Scientific advertising, influence, breakthrough advertising. If you just
read these, I promise you, read these and pull out the nuggets, the practical principles and
just start doing them. And yeah, you're going to be bad at first, but just work at it and you will
start making sales. You will, I promise. Even with five books, I rarely hear back. And so-
Well, it's a good litmus test though, isn't it, Mike? Because if you aren't willing to read 10
books on something, you're just not serious about it. You're not. Anything that I've been
seriously interested in that I want to get better at, 10 books, that's nothing. It's nothing.
I used to start with telling people, okay, whatever it is that you want to get good at, if you actually care, commit your first thing, commit to reading 25 books on
it and go find the classic books, not the later, not the more recent stuff, which are-
Yeah, not Pat Flynn's book. Go back. Go way back.
Well, I mean, there's something to be said for that though, I think. I mean, not in your case,
but in general, where a lot of new books are kind of just embroiderments upon past stuff. It's literally somebody who just went and read maybe
10 books, 15, maybe they broke 20 if they're really doing their research, quote unquote.
And they just, of the classics of the books that have withstood the test of time for a reason,
and then it's just kind of spun around and put into different words and maybe modernized. And that's fine. But I prefer when I'm getting into something, like when I got into golf, that's what I did. I read, I mean, I ended up reading dozens of books on it, but I went back. I started with Hogan's books. I started with, I'd have to look. I don't remember. I remember Hogan's clear. There were some other older ones as well. And then kind of worked my way forward. But I found that I can't
remember a single person when I told them that they responded positively. It was always like
immediate sag in emotion. Like, oh. Oh, so you didn't have that one quick trick that was going
to do it all for me. Okay. Well, I'll go email the next guy I can find then.
Who's going to pitch me on joining his mastermind. Show me the secrets. You made a ton of good points in there. So I'll see if I can hit on
a few of them. Well, the first going way back, the idea is a lot of people have this wrong
impression of sales or persuasion in their mind of like some dude at a used car dealership with
an oversized suit. So you just got to, first off, knock that off of your head.
Maybe a better example or archetype is a politician these days.
Exactly. Yeah. They're hardly indistinguishable at this point.
I mean, the political class, we don't have to go down that road, but I have
so little respect for the political class. And this applies to both sides of the aisle,
just politicians in general. I have so little respect for them.
We can go there if we want, but we'll stay on this track for at least a little bit until we
digress enormously. But you read the best on persuasion, you read people like Carnegie or many of the books that you talked about. And what they'll quickly get you to understand is, is, you know, a lot of it comes down to building a relationship with people. So there has to be a, first off, I don't think that that's something that can be done in a not genuine way and be sustainable. Like you really do have to kind of care about the people
you're serving and what you're doing. If you want to have any chance at being persuasive,
I think you'd have to be something of a sociopath to make it successful. The books you recommended
are all great. And I would say, you know, in my book, you're going to come out with a pretty hefty
reading list. You know, I'm not there to teach you the ins and outs of copywriting, but I am there
to tell you why copywriting is an important skill and where are some really good places to start with that. I mean, you brought up the good ones,
but Kern, let's go to Kern's mentors. Let's go back further than Kern. Let's go to Kennedy.
Let's go to Gary Halbert and these guys. Read the Boron letters. Read the ultimate sales. Those
should be in your pile of books. But fundamentally, I think what you're saying is that business
success is really a byproduct of skill. And that's a huge point that I'm trying to make in my book and if we go to
Halbert one of his favorite quotes of mine that always stuck with me when I was young and I first
read this by him he's like look the skill that I have as a communicator as a copywriter prevents
me from ever being poor I can never be poor I might be broke if I act irresponsibly with
my money, which we all know he did more than one occasion, but he can never be poor because he is
possessed of such a rich and powerful skill that at any point he was determined enough,
he could write those sales letters and he could generate himself income.
That's something I also try to explain to people is if you're going to be in business in any capacity, just become a good market Like it's going to be that Kim Kardashian stumbles on your product or service and is
like, oh my God, everyone needs to know about this and starts tweeting about it every day
for a month straight.
And that's still marketing.
So it's not like you avoided marketing.
You just got lucky with it.
Well, yeah, but maybe, you know, whatever it is that you're selling, let's say you didn't
do a good job selling it, but for some reason the right person stumbled on it.
And often what happens with those kinds of things, though, is good marketers stumble upon products and services, go to the people and say, hey, I could help you, but then you're going to have to give up.
One, I would never count on that because it doesn't happen often.
But two, even if it did happen, you have to give up.
But anyway, sorry to interject, but go ahead, carry on.
No, I mean, it's a great point.
It's like you might have an awesome trinketet to go back to one of my favorite terms, you know, and once somebody gets a hold of that,
or once somebody sees that, like the value might be glaringly obvious, but unless you're doing
something to get eyeballs on that, to make your unique selling proposition and the unique value
of that trinket overwhelmingly clear, you're at the very best putting yourself at an enormous and unnecessary disadvantage.
So yeah, man, I mean, I so deeply agree with, I don't want to get in like to the mutual admiration
society here, but I so deeply agree with everything that you've been saying. So I don't want to like
reiterate the points too much, but if nothing else, you know, think of these as force multipliers,
you do need a fundamentally good product and a good service. Cause then if you have good
marketing on top of crap, you're just speeding up the rate at which everybody discovers that you sell crap.
And that's not a good thing either. Right. And you're just doing people a disservice. You're
treating people in a way that you would not like to be treated. And the more you do that,
I do believe that the more pain you're going to experience in your life, you can call it karma.
You can call it, I don't know. I actually don't know what the Christian version of that would be.
Sin. Sure.
Sin. Yeah. Just being straight up deceitful. I mean, you're lying, right? You're lying. You're
being deceitful. That's wrong. Whatever you, well, again, unless you're like a nihilist or
something, then like most people just inherently realize that's not a good thing to do. We don't
want to do that. It's not good for you either. People don't find fulfillment or contentment
lying. So it doesn't matter how much money you bring in.
You're never going to be able to buy yourself that good night's sleep, right?
Maybe with enough Valium or something.
Yeah, chemically, you might be able to induce it.
Yeah.
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What are some of these other meta skills, these force multiplier skills that you talk about?
So writing and communication is a big one and persuasion is the other one. And they aren't technically the same, right? So you can have somebody who's a good writer, but a poor salesperson and a poor copywriter. There's a number of good examples of people who are great copywriters, but they're terrible writers. And then you also have people who are great writers, but terrible copywriters or terrible at persuasion.
who are great writers, but terrible copywriters are terrible at persuasion. So just because somebody is an awesome like fiction author doesn't mean that they're going to be able to write a
sales letter. And just because somebody can write a sales letter doesn't mean they're going to be
able to write the Lord of the Rings. Even nonfiction, even how to stuff, just because
you can write a good sales letter doesn't mean that you could write a good how to book.
Yeah, this is absolutely true. So I think the shining examples, like people like Gary Halbert, right? Somebody who is a good writer in his own regard, like he's got an awesome prose style. He's funny,
he's witty, he's entertaining. Like you would just read him for entertainment,
but then is absolutely so compelling when he writes copy. So I would say you need to study
these independently. And Halbert would say the same thing. And he would tell you exactly what to do,
how to do it. Like you need to sit down and you need to copy by hand the writing of other great
writers. Just like as a musician, you need to sit down and you need to listen to that ACDC song.
And you need to try and figure out these passages and ingrain it into your system.
And it goes back to what you're saying before. Like, yeah, there's some grinding here. There's
some hard work we have to do, but if you want to be great, you have to emulate people who are also great. So I just want to say we kind of blended those two, but they are technically different skills. You have writing and communication and you have persuasion. And when you put them together, that's where you get kind of copywriting in its most golden form.
The other one I try to make a strong case for is logic. Obviously, this is something I think society is severely lacking today. Logic is just being able to reason in straight channels. It's
making the rules of good reasoning explicit. Having a study of that, I think will help you
enormously in everything you do because writing itself is thinking on paper. So if you can't
think straight, you're probably going to have difficulty writing straight. It's also going to
help you just make better decisions in your life in general, not be suckered in by these specifism people or whatever, be able to weigh arguments,
be able to weigh positions and guide your life according to good reason, you know,
also enlighten other people along the way. I make a pretty strong case for that, if nothing,
that I'm just so dismayed to see how lacking it is in today's society. But I do really believe
that it's something that, again, is a force multiplier that will just magnify and benefit
people in ways that far extend beyond the specific study of that discipline itself.
Could you talk a little bit more about that? Like what are some of the, maybe it could be
myths or maybe it could be mistakes or just kind of key practical insights that you share
in terms of logic and reason? Yeah. I mean, it's like, you know,
there's only nine or so like, you know, laws of rules of logic. It's not like an enormously
complicated, at least starting off. So, I mean, if people can just understand some of the basic
fundamental differences, say between deductive reasoning and inductive reasoning, and we can go
into some detail here if you want. Maybe just for the sake of defining.
Yeah. So deductive reasoning then, if, by the way, let me give another reading recommendation
here as we get into this. There's a great book called Socratic Logic by Peter Kreeft. He was
at Boston College for a while, and he's actually got a two-page cheat sheet. It's a huge textbook,
and it's really good, but he's got a two-page cheat sheet that will kind of like summarize it.
It's all of logic in two pages. I wish I had it in front of me because it would
make it more concise here. But, you know, inductive reasoning is what we use in the
sciences that gives us sort of probabilities, right? We go out, we gather data points.
And from those data points, we reason upward to some type of general theory.
And then this is kind of how science works, right? Once we gather data and we reason up to some general theory, we then reason deductively down to, this is the arch of science, to making predictions, testing hypotheses, etc.
and the logic is valid. So if you have formal validity and soundness, then the conclusion follows necessarily. So the classic logic 101 that you have there is, you know, all men are
mortal. Socrates is a man. If you believe those two premises are true, then it follows with
certainty that Socrates is mortal, right? So that's one type of reasoning. The inductive is where we
actually go out and we make observations. We see swans and it seems like every swan is white.
So we reason up to a general theory that all swans are white, but that doesn't give us
certainty.
It only ever gives us probability, right?
So it's different because there might always be that case, the classic case that we go
somewhere and then we discover that black swan and we have that one counterexample and
then the theory is just blown to rags and bits.
So, I mean, this is just important. So people have a correct understanding of not just how logic
works, but also how science works and how it interacts with philosophy in this discipline.
So they're just not taken in by a bunch of crap, especially online. Science can give us
extremely strong probabilities and extremely strong predictive success. But you might want
to, you know, be a little wary of people who so flagrantly talk
about settled sciences and things like that. It's kind of a fundamental misunderstanding of what
science does. Yeah. Or a study proves blah, period, done as if this one study is the entire
weight of the evidence, which is never the case really. But that's obviously common too, where
it's say, hey, here's how this works. And here's this one study that shows that I understand sometimes for the purpose of brevity,
sometimes, or it may be implied, like if I'm saying, oh, research shows that this is how
energy balance works, for example, and I might cite a study or two, if people want to kind of
fact check me on it. But I think it's implied that there is more to the evidence here.
It's not just these two studies.
For someone who wants an unusually in those cases, I'm trying to link to like reviews
or meta analyses for the people who really want to dive into it.
But it's common, though, for people to see often not even read the study.
I'm thinking of like some social media, quote unquote, influencers who will just share media
headlines, really like study shows that marijuana actually raises IQ. Done. As if like
everybody just done. That's it. Settled science. Hashtag because science is always my favorite one,
right? So yeah, I know you make great points. And like none of this is to at all degrade the
scientific enterprise. It's just having a proper understanding and context of what it is.
Science gives us enormous amounts of knowledge when properly done and ethically conducted
and enormous amounts of predictive success.
But it's also abused by nincompoops, charlatans, wannabe influencers and stuff like that.
So logic can kind of help you chop that up because if you might actually have great research
and a lot of really good data, but people might be making bad inferences from it as well. So it's important to
be able to kind of analyze things from a couple different perspectives. If nothing else, especially
in the fitness and nutrition industry, where everybody's trying to push so many different
angles and arguments, just having some type of grass on what logic is how to study it formally,
being familiar with at least some of the more common fallacies that you typically see, you know, ad hominins, non sequiturs, red herrings,
things like that, just because so much of it, Mike, as you know, is so personality driven.
And some of the worst people to argue with, and some of the worst people to deal with are like
comedian types, because they're funny, and they're rhetorically effective, and people are attracted
to them. But just because somebody is rhetorically effective and funny doesn't mean they're
making a good argument. Just because somebody has six pack abs doesn't mean they're making
a good argument. Maybe they are, maybe they aren't, but their abs have nothing to do with it.
Humor is especially effective as one of those influence hacks, so to speak. Science is one
of them. History is another. If you can appeal to science and history persuasively, you can greatly increase the chances of people listening to you. And humor is huge too.
If you can make people laugh, for some reason, it just cuts right through critical filters and
it makes it much easier to influence people. And those three things are agnostic and morally
agnostic or amoral in my mind, because they can be used positively. And I try to use them. I mean, it's a blend, like I lean heavily on science and a lot of my stuff. And then sometimes I guess if the spirits will me, I'll try to mix in some humor as well and some history, if it seems applicable. So I use them myself, but I'm not trying to sell people
on bullshit. But if I were, you know, it definitely makes it easier.
Well, it goes back to the generalist thing. Like if you know, you've reasoned your position
through and you feel like I have really good information that's going to really benefit people,
then taking advantage of those rhetorical devices can do a great service to humanity,
right? Because now you're not going to be boring. You can present your case reasonably, but also in an entertaining way that people will be enriched
by and enjoy reading. So you're absolutely right. I love humor. I know if I would call myself an
inherently funny person or not, but I do try to use humorous devices when presenting my material
because I genuinely believe that my material is helpful. It's reasonable. So I want to make it as palatable as I possibly can. So you can start to see the
synergy between just even the three things that we talked about, where if you can start to stack
these things together, you'll be able to make a really quite compelling case. And even in the
sales process, we know that a lot of people kind of act first on emotions and storytelling and
humor and things like that. And then they'll try and rationalize or justify things by logic afterward. So if you at least have the logical structure and
good arguments for why a position is correct or why it's worth investing in a certain thing,
I mean, you're just going to help that part of the sales process automatically anyway.
So even if we just take it from a pure business standpoint, ethically conducted, of course,
it certainly would not contend anything
other than that. There's immense harmony and immense utility in just those three skills we've
already talked about right there. Totally agree. Are there any other force multiplier meta skills
that are in the book that are top of mind or that stand out that would be worth discussing?
Well, I mean, they're kind of maybe not as sexy in their own right because they don't get talked
about. I mean, I love talking philosophy and logic,
because there's so many ways we can go with it. But I think there's certain other skills,
like just being able to focus, Mike, like just being able to focus on a task and really developing
that skill, either through specific practices like meditation, or there's a number of ways that we
can do it. There's various active meditations. I think I first really learned to focus by being a musician and just being so single-mindedly
intent on one activity at a time has made me an effective craftsman really because I can sit down
and I can get something done without always having to feel like I need to check my phone or my inbox
or see what somebody else is up to or doing. And when I look out at
people today trying to get things done, even at the gym, like they can't go a set without texting
somebody. They can't even start until they find their precious jam on their iPhone, right? And
like that to me is seems like a fundamental problem, where if we could just get some focus,
some like real good old fashioned focus, you know, so you can single mindedly
attack something that is definitely a force multiplier. And that's something that even
though I think I learned it primarily as a musician, I didn't really learn to apply it
elsewhere until martial arts, where there's a huge emphasis on focus, intentionality,
precision, control, not being distracted, all these types of things. So again,
maybe not the sexiest thing to talk about, but sometimes the fundamentals are a little boring,
a little obvious, but they're never sexy. The fundamentals are never sexy. And that's one of
the downsides of selling fundamentals. I think it requires above average marketing skills to make
the fundamentals sexy enough to sell. And it's how do you package them?
It comes back to some of those things that like what I've tried to do since the beginning
is include. So there's always science. If I can include science and talk about studies and
interesting experiments that have been done, anecdotes, right? And sometimes they're historical
anecdotes. People in the past, especially other people, will immediately defer to because like, oh,
if Benjamin Franklin wrote about it or Benjamin Franklin went through a similar situation,
I better pay attention.
And then humor as well, trying to make it entertaining.
But I totally agree that focus is one of those, especially now, now more so probably than
ever before, is a meta skill that if you can't get it, and I would say, what would you think? I
would say getting it is you have to be able to do at least 20 to 30 minutes of focused work at a
time before maybe needing to take a break. And as you get even better at it, I mean, I'll speak for
myself. I drink water throughout the day. So inherently, probably every 30 to 60 minutes, I'm getting up to pee, honestly. So I probably don't go
much longer than an hour, hour and a half focused on something before, even if I'm completely in
that deep focus flow state where my bladder pulls me out of it. But I would say what,
if you can go for an hour without checking your phone, without flipping around on the internet
or social media or whatever, you can do well.
I think it was from Erickson, whose research was kind of misrepresented in Malcolm Gladwell's Outliers, the whole 10,000-hour rule, which is not that cut and dried.
But in his research, he found that even among the highest performers of multidisciplinary, there were musicians, there were business people, there were scientists, there were academics. I think it was about two hours of true deep focus
work per day. That was kind of their limit. It's not that they didn't do additional work, but
the most high value, fully focused, really flow state work was a couple hours a day.
And so Cal Newport in his book, Deep Work, I think his number was a couple hours a day. And so Cal Newport in his book,
Deep Work, I think his number is about four hours a day, he says for himself. He knows if he can get
four hours of real focused work done per day, he can achieve the things that he wants to achieve.
And so the reason why I bring those numbers up is those have just stuck with me as a good benchmark.
How am I doing? Can I go two to four hours a day of some of the more focused work for me is writing, obviously researching, doing podcasts to some degree,
because like, I'm not on my email when you're talking, I'm focused on the conversation. I'm
really trying to be the best interviewer I can and things like that. And then lower focus work
is email meetings, you know, random administrative things. Yeah, no, I think two to four hours is
really just about right.
And I think kind of the things that I focus on most throughout the day is writing. And there's
times like when I'm writing a book where, yeah, maybe I'll write for seven hours a day, but it's
so painful that would not be sustainable. You're grinding in the end. And I've been there myself,
and I'm sure we're the same in that. Like I keep going past that point where I know there's diminishing returns, but I am going to get more words on the page and it is
going to get done faster. It may not be my best work. My best work is going to be that first
couple hours, but I know that next couple hours are not going to be shit. I'm not just going to
delete it the next day. It might just mean a bit more editing and it's not as good, but Hey.
Yeah. And we'll call it a strategic overreach. And
every once in a while, those can be quite useful, whether in the gym or in writing or music. But
yeah, I would say, you know, most days I'm writing between two to four hours a day.
My guitar playing isn't quite as extensive as it used to be, but I do try to get somewhere
between 40 minutes to an hour of really good practice in per day. And the funny thing is,
is when you actually set restrictions,
and this is one of the principles I talk about in my book, it often increases practice efficiency.
So a question that I think is useful for people to ask, you know, I borrow this from Dan, John,
and I were just talking about this on my show yesterday, is just a little thought experiment
people can run is if you only had three days a week, 15 minutes a day to reach your goal,
what would you do? What are those vitally few activities that you would do to reach your goal?
So, you know, I look back when I was young, yeah, I would play guitar seven, eight hours a day, but
how productive was that seven to eight hours a day? Really? Well, honestly, really. And the
answer is not that productive. So my practice sessions are shorter now, but they're very
focused, very productive. Same thing with the gym.
You know, I'm not in the gym for as much time as I used to be in college, but I'm fitter,
stronger, and way more focused and productive with the time I do spend in the gym now.
So yeah, two to four hours on like the biggest task of the day, the most important thing
sounds about right to me.
And then, you know, you have these other kind of pockets of other skills or areas of your
life that you're focused on that can kind of, you know, maybe they won't be as much as that primary thing, but they should still be dedicated.
They should still be an area of focus.
That's a Parkinson's law, right?
The work expands to fill the time available, basically.
So as far as focus goes, what are some tips you have for people to improve their ability to focus?
You know, I would have two things. One is just finding something you're interested in enough
that you actually want to focus on it. That's tip number one.
That's worth emphasizing. As far as reading goes, for example, don't read stuff that you don't like,
unless you have to, unless it's something like occasionally for work, I do have to kind of slog
through things where it's boring, but I need to get some information. So it just is what it is. But outside of that,
I always am trying to find stuff to read that genuinely interests me because yeah,
that makes it a lot easier. Yeah. So I'll read through a ton of books, really dense ones. And
it's not that difficult because I just, I'm so interested in the material. Same thing. Like when
I was young, it's not that I was like a super disciplined, focused kid.
I actually wasn't.
I had trouble focusing on pretty much everything except the guitar and video games.
But I focused on guitar and video games because I loved them.
I was really, really interested.
But the problem was then when I had to start trying to do things that I wasn't interested in,
then I had to kind of deepen my focus abilities and be able to expand them.
Because let's be honest,
there's areas of life where you're going to have to focus on things you don't want to do. And you're
not all that interested in if you want to get past a certain point. And that's where martial
arts was really helpful for me and getting into meditation and various meditation practices,
and just actively working on forming a new relationship and response to your thoughts that often come
in automatically and uninvitedly into your head, to various feelings and emotions that also come
in automatically and uninvitedly, and learning to respond to them in a way rather than react
just out of pure disposition. I mean, so much of our distractions are so unconscious. So
we're like studying logic
makes the rules of good reasoning explicit. Practicing meditation makes all of these like
unconscious or below the level of awareness distractions explicit. So we can begin to
identify them, become aware of them and start to change our dispositions and relationship to them,
start to change our entire relationship to our thoughts, to our feelings. And I mean,
this has enormous benefits far beyond focus. I mean, we'll talk stress, anxiety. I probably don't need to make
much of a case for the benefits of meditation in general. What's funny about meditation is,
sorry, just to chime in, is promoted as meditation in the mainstream is really just being there
comfortably for like 10 minutes. That's actually all we're talking about. We're
not talking about what Buddhist monks are doing to try to achieve nirvana.
Yeah. I'm not saying you need to go join a transcendental meditation group. I'm just
saying it's just basic mindfulness practice. Now, there are a lot of, if you go in the Zen
tradition, that's where you'll find Buddhism is an interesting collection of different beliefs
and practices. But in Zen, you'll find a lot of what we're talking about, basic mindfulness, just being present, being aware, paying attention to
what's going on, exactly what you just said. It's just like being here rather than somewhere else.
And again, we're just talking maybe 10 to 20 minutes a day of what you might call it a
breathing exercise or body scan or whatever. Really, all we're talking about is just be present and be comfortable for
10, 15, maybe 20 minutes and control your attention. Just put it on something like
your breathing or, you know, different parts of your body or whatever. And then of course,
you get better at that. You're going to get better at putting your attention on your work for 20
minutes and just keeping it there as opposed to having it constantly being pulled in
all directions. Yeah, that's absolutely right. So I think while finding things that are of great
interest to you can help get you started, I think putting a little extra attention energy into
something like meditation, something like a mindful, and I say something like, because I
don't want to restrict people to too narrow of a window here, but something like a basic mindfulness meditation practice is what can help bridge that gap.
I like it. I agree.
I think this might be a good place to just wrap up the discussion because I'm sure there's quite a bit more in the book, but I think people can go get the book if they want to learn more. So I'm going to put the title of the book in the intro because I realized we
haven't even mentioned it yet. So I want people to know coming into it, what book we're talking
about, but for people who maybe skip the intro, what's the name of the book, where can they get
it? And then where can people find you and what else do you have coming? What's new and exciting?
Yeah. Thanks, Mike. So the book's called how to Be Better at Almost Everything. It's green. It's got a green cover, so you can't miss it if you see it somewhere.
I mean, you can get it anywhere. You can find it in probably most bookstores, but Amazon would be
the easiest and probably most efficient place for most people. So I would just recommend that.
Me, as for where to find me, a couple of different places, my website, chroniclesofstrength.com.
As Mike hinted earlier, I communicate most frequently through email. So I think I share some of my best content
through that platform. You can join that through my website, or I have a page 101 kettlebell
workouts.com that's the numbers one zero one kettlebell workouts.com. So you'll get a nice
little compendium of Pat Flynn style kettlebell workouts and that'll put you on my email list and that'll kind of like disseminate all the other places that I'm doing
stuff. The other primary one being my podcast, the Pat Flynn show, which you can find on iTunes
or Stitcher or Google Play or wherever you listen. So those would be the primary places.
Awesome. Well, thanks for taking the time, Pat. I appreciate it. It was a great discussion.
Pleasure, Mike. Thanks.
Hey there, it is Mike again. I hope you enjoyed this episode and found it interesting and helpful.
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